That's a silly comment best kept for C&D. George Osborne may have many characteristics that you don't like, but an Oxford 2.1 in Modern History says that dimness is not one of them.But [dim kids] may become Chancellor of the Exchequer...
That's a silly comment best kept for C&D. George Osborne may have many characteristics that you don't like, but an Oxford 2.1 in Modern History says that dimness is not one of them.But [dim kids] may become Chancellor of the Exchequer...
I don't think anyone has yet made the point that the choices we make about educating our children affect more than just ourselves and our own children. If we send our children to a private school, we are contributing to the continuance of the private system, and therefore to the sucking away of resources (of every kind) from the majority of children who will always be educated in the state sector.
I still believe that teaching is a vocation and the best teachers will be found in state schools as the money doesn't attract the best teachers, just those more driven by money.
With the current proposed pay structure and pension contributions you'll be lucky to find any newly qualified teachers in schools in the future....
There will be some teachers with a vocation more towards the education-as-a-social-engine end of the spectrum who will go to state schools regardless of the money. There will be others with a vocation more towards the education-as-imparting-learning-to-young-minds end of the spectrum, who can be just as vocationally driven, but go to the private sector, because of the resources, the motivation of the pupils, the general atmosphere, the (perception of) fewer behaviour issues, and the greater opportunities for extra curricular activities. I agree the higher salaries in some private schools are a relatively minor factor.I still believe that teaching is a vocation and the best teachers will be found in state schools as the money doesn't attract the best teachers, just those more driven by money.
I think you may not be appreciating the significance of my "of all kinds" when I was talking about the sucking of resources away from the state sector by private schools, a point amplified by PK99. The money, which you talk about, is more of an issue than you make out (not least because if half the leaders of the Conservative party were educating their own children in the state sector, you can bet they'd take resourcing it more seriously than they do now), but it's still only one part of the resource-deprivation which the private sector inflicts on the state sector, alongside teachers, parents (see PK99), and pupils.Disagree. The fact is if you are paying for your childs education then the odds are you are working and paying the same amount of tax that you would be paying if you sent your children to state funded schools.
So it could be argued that by not burdening the state system with the education of your offspring whilst still effectively paying for the place you are in fact increasing the resources of the state system.
The '000's of pounds paid into the private system in school fees are not at the expense of the state sector and would never be available to the state sector if private education didn't exist. So facilities for state education would only fall (as many private schools allow state schools the use of their sports grounds and PAY for use of public amenities they don't have swimming pools spring to mind in many cases)
You could argue that the best teachers will be attracted to private education, better salary/ conditions, but then it is up to the state sector to weedle out the crap and to best utalise and looking at the Comp my son attended they could start by replacing some of the 'managers' with teachers.
I think you may not be appreciating the significance of my "of all kinds" when I was talking about the sucking of resources away from the state sector by private schools, a point amplified by PK99. The money, which you talk about, is more of an issue than you make out (not least because if half the leaders of the Conservative party were educating their own children in the state sector, you can bet they'd take resourcing it more seriously than they do now), but it's still only one part of the resource-deprivation which the private sector inflicts on the state sector, alongside teachers, parents (see PK99), and pupils.
The sooner private education in the UK is outlawed the better, it is a bastion of the class structure and purchased priviledge.
Some thingthat were once legal are outlawed foxhunting for one. It would be better if in education at least the rich cannot buy additional privilege and advantage for their ofspring. When the elites have to use the state system hey may take more than a cursory interest in it.Outlawed? What right does the state have to ban a voluntary transaction and force every child into state education?
Some thingthat were once legal are outlawed foxhunting for one. It would be better if in education at least the rich cannot buy additional privilege and advantage for their ofspring. When the elites have to use the state system hey may take more than a cursory interest in it.
afaiaa Finland has a top class education system and no private system.
Some thingthat were once legal are outlawed foxhunting for one. It would be better if in education at least the rich cannot buy additional privilege and advantage for their ofspring. When the elites have to use the state system hey may take more than a cursory interest in it.
afaiaa Finland has a top class education system and no private system.
Oh, there are plenty of ways of tackling private education without banning it, were there the will. Charitable status is an obvious start. How about recouping the costs of teacher training for teachers in the private sector? Or, if you want to be really radical, cap the number of pupils that top universities can admit from any one school. Eton would be rather less attractive if Oxford only admitted a maximum of five old Etonians each year...